RDinNY wrote:NJRedman wrote:Good game Hoyas, maybe one day we'll play a close game in this new big east. haha
Home court seems to be worth about 10 points in the Big East.
NJRedman wrote:Edrick wrote:That's just incorrect. Basketball (or any other sport) is not deterministic. What determines who is 'best' is who's distribution of results is typically better than other teams distribution. Of course Xavier intersects Providence that would result in wins, the percentages wouldn't even be that low. Most of the league is like that. The odds are obviously astronomical but the 'best' team in the conference could finish 0-18. Let's just say for this that they would win 8 of 10 vs the average team (generous), that means the odds of going 0-18 is just .2^18
Not deterministic. Stop thinking like that.
Um...if the best team in the conference went 0-18 then they weren't the best team in the conference. Even if the best team in the conference went 9-9 then they aren't the best team in the conference.
NJRedman wrote:Edrick wrote:That's just incorrect. Basketball (or any other sport) is not deterministic. What determines who is 'best' is who's distribution of results is typically better than other teams distribution. Of course Xavier intersects Providence that would result in wins, the percentages wouldn't even be that low. Most of the league is like that. The odds are obviously astronomical but the 'best' team in the conference could finish 0-18. Let's just say for this that they would win 8 of 10 vs the average team (generous), that means the odds of going 0-18 is just .2^18
Not deterministic. Stop thinking like that.
Um...if the best team in the conference went 0-18 then they weren't the best team in the conference. Even if the best team in the conference went 9-9 then they aren't the best team in the conference.
Edrick wrote:NJRedman wrote:Edrick wrote:That's just incorrect. Basketball (or any other sport) is not deterministic. What determines who is 'best' is who's distribution of results is typically better than other teams distribution. Of course Xavier intersects Providence that would result in wins, the percentages wouldn't even be that low. Most of the league is like that. The odds are obviously astronomical but the 'best' team in the conference could finish 0-18. Let's just say for this that they would win 8 of 10 vs the average team (generous), that means the odds of going 0-18 is just .2^18
Not deterministic. Stop thinking like that.
Um...if the best team in the conference went 0-18 then they weren't the best team in the conference. Even if the best team in the conference went 9-9 then they aren't the best team in the conference.
I don't know why this is so hard for you. It's really not that hard of a concept to grasp.
You could take the 96 Bulls and have them play this year's Knicks. There is some probability that the Knicks would win every game in their series. That's just how small numbers (events) work. Not playing a large enough sample to approximate the distribution does nothing to change the distribution.
So again, if you go back to the original point and assume that your conference's best team has an 80% chance of winning any (and all) of their 18 games, that means they also have a 20% chance of losing. So, the best team in the conference in that case has a .2^18 chance of going 0-18.
Edrick wrote:NJRedman wrote:Edrick wrote:That's just incorrect. Basketball (or any other sport) is not deterministic. What determines who is 'best' is who's distribution of results is typically better than other teams distribution. Of course Xavier intersects Providence that would result in wins, the percentages wouldn't even be that low. Most of the league is like that. The odds are obviously astronomical but the 'best' team in the conference could finish 0-18. Let's just say for this that they would win 8 of 10 vs the average team (generous), that means the odds of going 0-18 is just .2^18
Not deterministic. Stop thinking like that.
Um...if the best team in the conference went 0-18 then they weren't the best team in the conference. Even if the best team in the conference went 9-9 then they aren't the best team in the conference.
I don't know why this is so hard for you. It's really not that hard of a concept to grasp.
You could take the 96 Bulls and have them play this year's Knicks. There is some probability that the Knicks would win every game in their series. That's just how small numbers (events) work. Not playing a large enough sample to approximate the distribution does nothing to change the distribution.
So again, if you go back to the original point and assume that your conference's best team has an 80% chance of winning any (and all) of their 18 games, that means they also have a 20% chance of losing. So, the best team in the conference in that case has a .2^18 chance of going 0-18.
stever20 wrote:RDinNY wrote:NJRedman wrote:Good game Hoyas, maybe one day we'll play a close game in this new big east. haha
Home court seems to be worth about 10 points in the Big East.
With Georgetown/St John's- seems to be about 20!
77-60 +17 GU
82-60 +22 SJ
79-57 +22 GU
70-81 +11 SJ
so 39 pt difference last year, 33 pt this year. That's ridiculous.
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